Friday, April 15, 2011

W. D. Candland ~ Mayor of the Month ~ April 2011









The following are references to W.D. Candland in the " History of Mt. Pleasant" by Hilda Madsen Longsdorf: 




    May 1893, the Mt. Pleasant Electric Light
Company filed articles of incorporation, with William Zabriskie, President, and     W. D. Candland as Secretary  p 172



There
were fully 500,000 head of sheep owned in the county, and with Mt. Pleasant,
the Queen City of Sanpete, fast becoming the commercial center, two prominent
wool companies were formed. In 1893 the Mt. Pleasant Wool & Live Stock
Company was organized by N. S. Nielsen, J. H. Seely, F. C. Jensen, James

In
1895 :

W.D. Candland was elected on the Republican ticket as the .first Senator from
Sanpete County.



February 1906, the North Sanpete Bank was
incorporated with a capital stock of $50,000.00. W. D. Candland,      president; A.
J. Aagard, vice president; and H. C. Beaumann, cashier. They were installed in
their new building on the 
north side of Main Street, midway between State and
First West. p 183

June
18, 1918, during W. D. Candland's term as mayor, Mt. Pleasant was visited by a
number of floods, one being the biggest in the history of the city. Great
boulders and rocks were carried with the stream of mud, damaging bridges and
fences, sweeping down the streets and through city lots, covering gardens and
filling basements, and completely filling the channels with debris, rocks, etc.



One life was lost, that of Louis Oldham, who, near his home east of the city,
slipped and fell into the stream. Some days later, his body was found in the
debris west of the city.

A few days after the flood, a group of convicts were
sent from the state penitentiary to assist in clearing out Pleasant Creek
channel. Many local men volunteered their assistance. p 200  



1918-19. Mayor, W. D.
Candland; Recorder, A. O. Neilson;    



     Treasurer, Hannah Barnette;
Councilors, John Gunderson, four

years; A. E. Mcintosh,
James Monsen, O. M. Aldrich, Bent R. Hansen. p 238


The flood gave W. D.
Candland and his associates financial and other troubles. A $25,000.00 bond
issue was voted for the purpose of piping pure spring water into the waterworks
system.



And now my friends, we
are in the hands of the undertaker. (Note: The mayor at that time, Bent R.
Hansen, was also an undertaker. ) p 242



It will perhaps be proper to
here give the names of those, who,



in addition to those
heretofore mentioned, assisted in instructing the youth up to about the year
1880.  Joseph S. Day, Joseph Page, John
Carter, Jeramiah D. Page,  Christina
Bertelsen,  Lucy Wheelock, Hans Jorgen
Shultz, Mrs. H. J. Hutchinson, John T. Henniger,  ­Eli A. Day, and Hilda Dehlin were those who
now come to the  memory of the writer.





A little later and in the
order given, the following teachers came upon the scene: Samuel H. Allen, Amasa
Aldrich, Abram Johnson, H. P. Jensen, Tina M. Morrison, Au­gusta Dehlin, Hans
Madsen, Joseph Madsen, George Christensen, C. W. Sorensen, William 1. Tidwell,
Ferdinand Ericksen, Ida Dehlin, Cecelia Winters, Olof C. Anderson, W. D.
Candland, and Som X. Christensen.  

pp 268,269

318


                        EXCERPTS FROM ADDRESS
             By W. D. Candland,
1922



I remember the days when the big drum was heard, and
the women, with blanched faces and trembling limbs, gathered their children
around them and fled to the fort; how men, with grim set faces, took their
ever-ready rifles from the wall and hastened to the square, ready to meet the
merciless, treacherous foe, know­ing how he lurked in the shadows, or stealthily
crawled on his belly to get near enough to fire a deadly shot. How the stoutest
hearts quailed when that blood-curdling yell broke on the still night air,
knowing it meant death in the most horrible form that the fiends could devise,
unless they could for the time beat them back.



I have watched the small hamlet founded by that brave and hardy band,
through all the vicissitudes of frontier perils, grow into a beautiful,
prosperous city. I have known their lives and aspirations, their hopes and fears,
and as they have been gathered one by one into the fold of the great beyond.



I desire to follow, for a few moments, another line of thought, and ask
you this question:



Did these things just happen in a haphazard way, or was there an
impelling, guiding force that actuated and directed events and caused men to
come here who were needed, whose training in various avocations, made them
exceedingly valuable in the new order of things?



If you say it was just an accident, you will admit at least it was
fortunate that William S. Seely, who had such a happy faculty of making friends
with the Indians, settled here.



Wasn't it fortunate that men and women settled here who could make the
things that were so sadly needed? That John Tidwell could make tubs and churns
and pails out of wood, bound



with
wooden hoops? That James Porter could take the hide from the ox and make it
into leather and then into shoes? That Abram Day knew how to survey and build
roads and sawmills? That Fechser and others knew how to build a flour mill?
That P. M. Peel could fashion things from iron and make a threshing ma­chine?
That Erick Gunderson was a carpenter? That Alma Staker

319

and Paul Dehlin could
make furniture? That Wellington Seely could set broken bones and pull teeth?
But most fortunate and most wonderful of all were the women, brave as their
husbands, and even more industrious, who could shear the sheep, wash, card, and
spin the wool, weave it into cloth, then make from the cloth raiment for the
whole family and the blankets and sheets they slept in. The men did nobly, but
my admiration and- respect, my profound reverence, is for the women who not
only performed their full measure of the work, but went many times into the
shadows of the valley of death in the throes of motherhood; their names are not
engraved on the monument, but they are enshrined in the archives of heaven and
are hallowed in the immutable love of Almighty God. Be you Mormon, Jew, or
Gentile, it is your privilege to determine in your own mind whether these
things all came by chance, or by some irresistible governing power.



Would
that our forefathers, who have passed beyond, might have lived to see and enjoy
the fruits of their labors as we now do.

ADDRESS BY  W. D. CANDLAND  



                        1932


      This is the seventy-third anniversary of
the founding of Mt. Pleasant.



What
wonderful changes have taken place since then. Con­sider the train of events
that has led up to the settlement of this place. In the short period of less
than thirty years, people from many countries had trickled into Mt. Pleasant,
Utah. If it had not been for an announcement of a new plan of salvation, made
in 1830, I doubt that any of us would be here today. And what sort of men and
women were they who came here? Those of us who can remember the first Seelys,
Bartons, Reynolds, Monsens, Madsens, Christensens, Rasmussens, Peels, Larsens,
Sorensons, and all those names recorded on the Pioneer monument. Such people
are the salt of the earth, they tilled the soil and planted trees, and they
built a beautiful little city with fine homes, churches, and schools.



In
the short space of seventy years the little settlement blos­somed into a
thriving, prosperous farming community of three thousand inhabitants; two banks
had opened.  But as opportunity

320

was limited, many of her
sons and daughters had moved on to newer fields in other counties and other
states.



As this is a
historical narrative, it seems proper to discuss some history that is now in
the making. During the war, prices climbed to levels never dreamed of before.
Money was plenti­ful and people acquired extravagant habits; stocks and bonds
sold far above their actual value. Farm lands in this vicinity went up to $225
an acre. Butter went up to 90c a pound, eggs to 75c a dozen, cattle and sheep
went up out of sight. So the thrifty man, who had a little spare money, went to
the bank and de­posited it, saying to the cashier, "Here is some money I
want to leave with you, and I want you to pay me some interest on it." The
cashier informed him, "We can only do that by lending it to some farmers
who will give us a mortgage on his farm to secure it. Of course, we cannot pay
you unless he pays us, but we can take his farm." Now the only security
the people in agricultural communities have to offer is their farm and
livestock. If a bank is to serve its people, it must accept as security for
loans that which they have to offer.



In this transaction we
set up a triangle, the depositor, the banker, and the borrower. The arrangement
is perfect, but it all depends on the borrower's ability to pay. Now, what hap­pened?
Prices began to go down. The farmer went to the bank and said the price of
wheat has gone from $2.50 a bushel to 50c a bushel.  The dairyman says, "Butter has declined
from 90c to 25c." The sheep man says, "Wool has gone down from 40c a
pound to 12c. We cannot pay the money we owe, not even the interest due."
The cattleman, the poultryman all have the same tale of woe. But says the
banker, "We must have some money. Mr. Depositor demands his money, which
we lent to you, and which you agreed to pay back at a certain time."
"But," says the borrower, "I just haven't got it. I can't sell
anything to get it. I am awfully disappointed. I guess you will just have to
take the farm." If this situation were true of only one line, it would not
be so bad. But when it is true of all lines, a deplorable condition exists. At
this time, Mr. Depositor goes to the bank and demands his money; not one
depositor only, but all the depositors. There is not enough money in any bank
in the country to pay all the
 321
depositors at one
time. So the banker says, "We cannot pay you now; if you will wait until
these farmers, cattle, and sheepmen, and poultrymen and dairymen pay up, you
will get your money. But the depositor says, "No, I want it now." The
law says in such cases the bank commissioner shall take charge of the bank and
close it up. Now, who. is to blame? The depositor, in good faith, left his
money with the bank expecting to get it in due time. The bank lent it to the
farmer expecting he would return it as prom­ised. The farmer expected to sell
his products for money enough to pay at the appointed time. It is no fault of
his that the bottom dropped out of everything. He couldn't foresee, neither
could the banker, nor the depositor, that the whole world would be suddenly
turned upside down. If the borrower knew these things would happen he should
not have borrowed the money. If the banker knew, we should not have loaned the
money. If the depositor knew, he should not have deposited the money. Neither
of the triangle is to blame. And each one must take his share of the
responsibility. Did each one think he was doing for the best? Did each act in
good faith? I think they did. If I may be per­mitted at this time, I would like
to say for the bank that I was connected with, that its every act was taken
with the full belief that it was in accordance with the law, with good banking
practice, and for the best interest of all concerned. Every officer or stockholder
who borrowed from the bank was required to put up ample security. The loan was
passed on by the board and ap­proved by the bank examiner. Every one of them
will be paid. The bank set up a secondary reserve of thirty thousand dollars in
bonds. It had the backing and approval of its Salt Lake Cor­respondent Bank,
and that bank on the very morning it was decided not to open, offered to lend
us seventy five thousand dollars, but we knew that would only delay the
inevitable. While the situation is lamentable, we cherish the knowledge that
not a whisper of wrong done can be truthfully brought against the management of
the bank. I think I can say the same thing for the other bank in this town. If
we were the only ones that had failed you might think we were at fault, but
when you know that

322

twenty-five banks in
Utah closed their doors in the last few months, that hundreds of banks all over
this country have failed, that banks, and even governments in Europe have
failed, that the bank of England, supposed to be the soundest financial
institution in the world, was shaken to its very foundation, that every bank in
Utah has had anxious moments, you realize that we are only a small part of a
world-wide disaster. I watched a run on Zion's Savings Bank a few years ago. I
saw people draw their money and then wonder what to do with it. I talked with a
policeman, a former Mt. Pleasant boy, who told me people called him in all
hours of the night asking what to do to protect their money. They had it and
were afraid of being robbed, which is exactly what did happen to some of them.
Tell me, what is the best thing to do now. The matter is in the hands of the
depositors of the two local banks. If they want to drive the banking department
in the time of financial depression, to foreclose on these borrowers and sell
their property for virtually nothing, they can make of Mt. Pleasant the
blackest spot in America. They can depreciate the security they hold for their
money to ten cents on the dollar, and thus suffer a loss themselves. Or they
can say, "No, we will sit tight and wait; things will come back."

There is no better
security in the world than a good farm. It may not pay much, it may not sell
readily, but it won't burn up, it won't run away, and it will produce something
to live on. It is safer than government bonds; much safer than European govern­ment
bonds, and when a good farm in this country has no value, the country won't be
any good either. Be patient, give the borrower time to work out his problem.
The government of the United States has recognized the awful condition and has
provided some relief, but we must help our­selves and cooperate, or it will do
us no good. Will the record of the next few years be a time of blight and
despair, or will it be mutual cooperation and material progress?

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Thomas Braby ~ Mayor of the Month March 2011




Thomas Braby was born in Sussex England, January 10, 1884, a son of Edward and Ann Braby.  The family consisting of the parents and 10 children came to Utah in 1875, after joining the L.D.S. Church in England.

In September 1879, Mr. Braby came to Mt. Pleasant and was employed by L.J. Jordan and John H. Seely, prominent wool growers for 11 years, after which he engaged in business for himself.

He married Eliza Keddington of Salt Lake City on September 21, 1887, and they were the parents of seven children.  Mrs. Braby died February 22, 1927 and on June 18, 1931 Mr. Braby married Annie C. Jensen of Mt. Pleasant.






During his youth when Mr. Braby worked as a sheepherder, he acquired his education with "Gaskell's Compendium of Forms", which was practically his sole teacher.







In 1894, Caleb West, Utah's last territorial governor, commissioned Mr. Braby as Captain of Company C (later Company D); Utah National Guard, which rank he held for 14 years.  During our trouble with Mexico, preceding the World War, Mr. Braby was made Major of Ordinance, and was stationed at Fort Douglas on the staff of General W.G. Williams.  He was a member of the Utah State Shooting Team which competed at Camp Perry, Ohio in 1910-1911.







He was assistant postmaster for three terms, prior to serving 16 years as Postmaster from 1899 to 1915; and later served two terms as Mayor of Mt. Pleasant.  Previously, he had been on the city council committee of three which supervised construction of the municipal water system.  He also served four years as city marshal.







He was active in the L.D.S. Church, as president and later as secretary of the North Ward Elders Quorum.  He was also active in fraternal organizations.  He also served many years as secretary-treasurer of the Pleasant Creek Irrigation Company.







His children were Ann B. Syndergaard and Ada B. Kofoed who lived in Salt Lake City; Edward Braby of Columbia; Orson Braby of California and Mt. Pleasant, and Nellie B. Coates of Mt. Pleasant.  One son, Ralph R. Braby was one of 11 members of the 145th Field Artillery who were drowned at San Diego, California in May of 1918, when a rip tide engulfed them while bathing.  His other two sons were both veterans of World War I.


Sunday, January 16, 2011

James W. Anderson ~ Mayor of the Month ~ January 2011

Our Mayor book at the Mt. Pleasant Relic Home had the picture of James W. Anderson, but no information.  This has been a collaborative effort to obtain information and document his history.  What an exceptional man he was.   A big thankyou to Lee R. Christensen and Kaye Watson.





 James W. Anderson was born in Fairview, Sanpete County Februrary 28, 1875, the son of Archibald and Caroline Johnson Anderson. He married Amelia Allred April 2, 1897 in the Manti LDS Temple. His wife Amelia was the daughter of James A Allred and Mary Ann Pollard. That same year he left for a two year mission to the southern states.


A teacher in Utah elementary and high schools for more than 46 years Mr. Anderson received his early teaching experience in Spring City, Sanpete County and later went to Mt. Pleasant to be Supt. of Sanpete County Schools. He served as principal of Salt Lake City summer school for 8 years. He had charge of West High Night School for 8 years.

He taught school in Spring City when the large elementary opened.  In 1900 he was also a teacher of Spring City Religion Classes which was the forerunner of Seminary.  He was the ward clerk of Spring City 1907-1908.


Mr. Anderson also served as juvenile judge of Sanpete and Sevier Counties for two terms and had been first counselor in North Sanpete L.D.S. Stake Presidency. A resident of Salt Lake from 1923. He was active in Grant L.D.S. Stake High Council and later in 11th L.D.S. Ward activities.



His children:


Beulah Amelia    born 13 Jan    198?      died 1971

James Clair        born      May  1900 

Vernon H.          born               1903     died 1964

Allen Boyd         born  17 July  1905      died 1964

Alma Owen        born               1909     died 1987

Eva Maurine       born               1913

Mary Marjorie    born               1918



James and his wife, Amelia are buried in the City Cemetery, Salt Lake City, Utah



The above information was researched and shared by Kaye Watson of Spring City.




"1912-13. Mayor, James W. Anderson; Recorder, Daniel Rasmus­sen; Treasurer, Mrs. Elizabeth Larsen; Councilors, H. Leroy Neilson, A. E. Mcintosh, Justus B. Seely, George C. Sorensen, A. Merz, Lauritz Larsen"

"While James W. Anderson was mayor, the electric light plant became an accomplished fact. A bond of $38,000.00, was voted"



Comment from Lee R. Christensen:

Kathy: Some clues for others to build on so that Mayor Anderson is better known:

From the Mt Pleasant census record 1920 and LDS Ancestral File
James William Anderson, born Fairview 1875, married Amelia Allred (Sp Cty), died 1945. children Vernon, Boyd, Owen Maurine and Mary and Beulah (from 1910 census) is shown as teacher both census.

Is shown as Sup of Schools in the news clip of the Hamilton school tragedy . Beulan is one of the poets shown. I do not find the family 1930 census Mt Pleasant. I"ll keep looking,  lee






photo courtesy of BYU ~ George Edward Anderson Collection



Tuesday, December 14, 2010

James Monsen ~ Mayor of the Month ~ December 2010 ~ He Served from 1905 to 1909


The Sanpete Stake of Zion, which included Sanpete County, was in 1900 divided into two sections, the North and the South, all north of Ephraim to belong to the North Sanpete Stake, and all south, including Ephraim, to the South Sanpete Stake. C. N. Lund, of Mount Pleasant, was appointed president of the north section. On the same date, December 9, 1900, Mt. Pleasant was divided into two wards, the North and the South. Lars P. Madsen was made Bishop, with Thomas West and Joseph Seeley as counselors of the North ward, and James Larsen, Bishop, with Christian Johansen and James Monsen as counselors of the South ward. The first ward schoolhouse, which was built in 1875, was then razed to give way for the South ward chapel. The new building, which was begun at once, was dedicated in 1908.  Mt. Pleasant History Hilda Madsen Longsdorf  p 181

In 1901, the Mt. Pleasant Commercial Bank erected their building on the north side of Main Street between Second and Third West.




The mountains east of the city had in the past produced a great deal of lumber, and about this time and later, a number of mills were operated, among these later lumber dealers from time to time were: E. L. Durphy, Lauritz and Peter A. Larsen, John H. Seeley and James Monsen. Large forest fires were often seen in the mountains. HML p 182





During the year (1908), the Progress Mercantile Company, which became very prominent in the business world, was incorporated with James Larsen, president; F. C. Jensen, vice president; H. C. Jacobs, secretary-treasurer; S. E. Jensen, James Monsen, Andrew Larsen, John Strom and Andrew Swenson, directors. Their place of busi­ness was established in the Equitable building, formerly occupied by the Aldrich Brothers.  Mt. Pleasant History Hilda Madsen Longsdorf p 183.


Fiftieth Anniversary Celebrated





Early in February 1909, there was called a mass meeting by Mayor James Monsen, for the purpose of deciding the advisability of a celebration sometime during the year, honoring the fiftieth anniversary of the settling of Mt. Pleasant.




It was decided at this meeting to hold a three day celebration beginning on the 5th day of July.




At this time, Andrew Madsen stated he thought it would be appropriate if steps could be taken towards the erection of a suitable monument in honor of the Pioneers. The city officials felt that owing to financial conditions they were not able to officially take any steps in that direction. Madsen then began to take the matter up personally, having full confidence that if proper steps were taken, the descendants would join in a movement whereby something could be erected, giving honor and credit, not only to the pioneers, but to the descendants as well, and to all of the people of our city. He then called upon Bishops Daniel Rasmussen, James Larsen and Mayor Monsen.



A conference was held, after a few minutes discussion, they were united and agreed upon calling a mass meeting on the 17th day of February, 1909. At this meeting, Daniel Rasmussen was elected chairman and Joseph Seely secretary. The plan was pre¬sented to erect in some suitable place, a large monument in honor of the Pioneers. After a few minutes discussion, this was unanimously agreed upon.



Two committees were appointed. One, Ferdinand Ericksen. E. C. Johnson, James Larsen, James Monsen, and Andrew Madsen, to select the character of monument to be erected, and a like com-mittee, consisting of five members, Daniel Rasmussen, Joseph Seely, James Borg, C. W. Anderson and Joseph Monsen, were to devise ways and means by which to raise the necessary funds for the erection of a suitable memorial.



February 27th, another meeting was called and the two com-mittees were consolidated. The committees worked earnestly and it was only by stick-to-it-tive-ness and constant efforts with renewed vigor that they were able to make such rapid advancement.



The census of the descendants were taken and an assessment of $35.00 to the family was made. Any male in Mt. Pleasant over ten years of age in 1859, was eligible to have his name on the monument. Some responded promptly, while some were lax. Madsen made a trip to Carbon County, meeting with a number of the descendents at Price and Wellington, who, after receiving full explanation of the progress and intentions of the committee, did not hesitate and at once contributed their portion. In March, a mass meeting was held to prepare for the celebration. The city appointed the following committee chairmen: James Monsen

general chairman; C. N. Lund, program; Daniel Rasmussen,  decoration; W. D. Candland, finance; Ferdinand Ericksen, amusement; Joseph Seely, entertainment; and also made an appropriation of $200.00.







The work was completed in due time and a beautiful monument, which is composed of white bronze metal was erected on the northwest corner of the Church Block, intersecting Main and State Streets. It stands upon a cement foundation, ten feet square, and is surmounted by six foot figure representing "Faith" typifying the devotion and confidence of the Pioneers. The total height of the monument is twenty-seven feet, six inches. The estimated cost about $2,500.00. Mt. Pleasant History Hilda Madsen Longsdorf p 183-185









In 1909, during the time James Monsen was mayor, three cement side walk districts were created. District number one, on the north side of Main Street from State Street to Fifth West. District number two, east side of State Street from Main Street to the cemetery, and the west side of State Street from Main Street to Fifth South. District number three, west side of Fifth West from Main Street to Fifth South. Mt. Pleasant History Hilda Madsen Longsdorf p  195


















Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Harold C. Beauman ~ Mayor of the Month ~ November 2010

Harold C. Beaumann, son of Harold C and Ella, was born in Mt. Pleasant, September 20, 1863.  His parents emigrated from Denmark in 1862 and located in Mt. Pleasant.



He worked on the farm and attended the local schools.  In 1886 he was appointed postmaster, which position he held for six years.  He was City Treasurer for four  years, County Treasurer for two years and elected a member of the City Council in 1895.  He was then elected mayor of Mt. Pleasant in 1904.



He assisted in organizing the Mt. Pleasant Bank and was an agent for Royal and Continental Fire Insurance Companies and the Pioneer Davis County nurseries.



He was married in Mt. Pleasant September 20, 1892 to Anne, daughter of Henry and Kate DeGraff, who was born in Salt Lake City, September 30, 1870.  They had two children:  Harold and Ruth.



January 25, 1889, Harold C. Beaumann was appointed Post­master. For a time the post office was in the former location; later. however, it was moved to the east side of First West, between Main and First South.          .Mt. Pleasant History by Hilda Madsen Longsdorf p. 167.

In March 1903, while George Christensen was mayor, the city voted a bond for water works, but not until 1905, during H. C. Beaumann's term, were contracts let for installing the system. In due time, the system was installed, and with its completion. the settling barrels with their prickly pears, which had been used at most every home for the settling of the roily water, disappeared.  HML p. 182.



February 1906, the North Sanpete Bank was incorporated with a capital stock of $50,000.00. W. D. Candland, president; A. J. Aagard, vice president; and H. C. Beaumann, cashier. They were installed in their new building on the north side of Main Street, midway between State and First West.  HML p. 183

1904-5. Mayor, H. C. Beaumann; Recorder, A. H. Maiben; Treas­urer, E. Ellis Day; Marshal, Andrew S. Jensen; Justice of the Peace, A. B. Waldermar; Councilors, A. E. Mcintosh, (16) Joseph Monsen, A. C. Madsen, George H. Marshall, (17) A. C. Wall, S. E. Jensen, Bent R. Hansen.  HML p. 237